Help fight cancer, join Relay For Life of Greater Attleboro
Photo courtesy of the Relay For Life of Greater Attleboro
Luminaries, which are lit both in memory of cancer victims and in honor of cancer survivors, line the track at a past Relay For Life of Greater Attleboro. This year's event, to which the public is invited, will be held Friday, June 17 through Saturday morning June 18 at the Norton Middle School on Route 123 in Norton.
The Relay For Life of Greater Attleboro will return to a full event for the
first time in three years when it holds its 24th annual team
fundraiser to benefit the American Cancer Society on June 17-18 at the Norton Middle
School.
It will be the first relay featuring teams camping out overnight since 2019
because of the coronavirus pandemic. The relay will be held at the middle
school instead of the high school this year due to the construction of a new turf
field there.
With the state still mainly locked down and large gatherings banned in 2020,
the relay was limited to a virtual event and a small one held in August outside
of the Attleboro Arts Museum.
Last year, with vaccinations available, two smaller in-person events were held
in June: a drive-thru relay at Norton High School and the first Slam Cancer
poetry-essay event at Balfour Riverwalk Park in Attleboro held in partnership
with the Attleboro Public Library.
Organizers, Relay Chairwoman Barbara Benoit said, are thrilled to be returning
to a full event.
“I'm
very excited to be back to an overnight relay this year. The past two years
have been a challenge due to COVID-19,” she said.
“I have talked to many of our relay teams, and they are happy to be back to an in-person
event with their team members.”
This year’s relay will
begin with an opening ceremony at 6 p.m. Friday, June 17, followed by a
survivors’ lap and a dinner for survivors and their caregivers being provided
by Waters Church of North Attleboro.
The opening ceremony will include a presentation by one of the local poets who
participated in this year’s second annual Slam Cancer event.
Tara Lines of Wrentham, who battled childhood leukemia, will share her
inspiring story of survival, and read her poem titled, “Oh Cancer, You Tried!,” which she first presented at Slam
Cancer in May.
Due to the event being held at the middle school, walkers will be doing laps
around the ballfield there instead of a track, but there will still be
luminaries --- candles dedicated to both cancer victims and survivors ---
lining part of the field.
The luminaries, which will be lit with glow sticks, will be anchored with about
2,000 canned goods, thanks to a drive organized by Sensata Technologies of
Attleboro. The cans, as the relay has done in past years, will be donated to
three area food pantries after the event.
The luminaria ceremony will be held at 9 p.m., and will feature both bagpiper
Donna Lucas of the Colonial Pipers Bagpipe Band, as well as remarks from
another Slam Cancer poet, Allan Fournier of North Attleboro. He’s planning to read
“Unfinished Business: Overtime,” an original poem that invokes the
indomitable spirit that’s personified by cancer survivors.
The relay will include music by Attleboro disc jockey Nate Adams, a dance party
led by Adams, late-night bingo hosted by Team Wings of Hope, an overnight
scavenger hunt, breakfast at 6 a.m. hosted by Team Ladybugs and many other
activities. In addition, many teams will be selling raffles, food and
beverages, with the proceeds going to the cancer society.
The relay will conclude Saturday morning, June 18 following a closing ceremony,
which will start at about 9 a.m.
The public is invited to attend,
whether they’re registered for the event or not. The middle school is located across from St. Mary’s
Church on Route 123 in Norton.
The relay, as of this writing, has raised close to $60,000, with a goal of raising $100,000, and
includes 135 participants and nearly 30 teams.
The Greater Attleboro relay draws teams
and participants from most area communities, including Attleboro, North
Attleboro, Mansfield, Norton, Plainville, Rehoboth, Seekonk and Wrentham.
If you’d like to form or
join a team or volunteer for the relay, go to: www.relayforlife.org/greaterattleboroma
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